The Five Temple Caves is a series of rock cut Buddhist caves in Subei Mongol Autonomous County, Gansu, northwest China. The complex once numbered twenty-two caves but over the centuries the number was reduced to five, of which four remain today, in a gorge on the left bank of the Danghe River (党河).[1] [2] On the basis of their structure and iconography, one of the caves is dated to the Northern Wei, the other three to the Five Dynasties and Song.[1] The complex lies some to the south of the Mogao Caves, and together with these, the Western Thousand Buddha Caves, Eastern Thousand Buddha Caves, and Yulin Caves, is one of the five grotto sites in the vicinity of Dunhuang managed by the Dunhuang Academy.[3] In 2013, in recognition of their significance to China, the Five Temple Caves were designated by SACH a Major Historical and Cultural Site Protected at the National Level.[4]
There are four caves with murals:[1] [2]
Cave | Construction | Modification | Subject matter | Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cave 1 | Tejaprabhā Buddha, Twelve Signs and Twenty-Eight Mansions of the zodiac | central pillar | ||
Cave 2 | honeysuckle pattern; fire-damaged | rectangular, with front (collapsed) and rear chambers | ||
Cave 3 | rectangular, with front (collapsed) and rear chambers | |||
Cave 4 | Samantabhadra, Thousand Buddhas | rectangular, with front (collapsed) and rear chambers | ||
A further five kilometres to the south, on the east bank of the Danghe, is a site known as the One Temple Cave . One cave with murals survives, showing donor figures and dated to the tenth century.[1]